Inter 2-1 Napoli: Cassano & Insigne the key men but Guarin provides the most important contributions

December 12, 2012

The starting line-ups

Inter leapfrogged Napoli and into second place in Serie A.

Andrea Stramaccioni was without Walter Samuel, so moved Esteban Cambiasso into the centre of defence.

Walter Mazzarri brought Christian Maggio back into the starting line-up, but otherwise named an unchanged side.

This was a good, open game of football – Inter stormed into a 2-0 lead and although Napoli fought back, they couldn’t quite find an equaliser, partly thanks to some fine Inter defending.

Formations

This was a battle between two similar formations – essentially 3-4-1-2 systems. It was a slight surprise to see Walter Gargano fielded higher up than Javier Zanetti, who was a solid holding midfielder, but otherwise the sides were as expected, and matched one another in the centre of midfield. Javier Zanetti was close to Marek Hamsik, Gargano near Gokhan Inler, while Fredy Guarin was higher up near Valon Behrami.

In this zone, neither side really gained control of the match. Inter’s three midfielders performed better – Zanetti had a fine game in front of a makeshift defence, while Guarin played one of his better games for Inter, driving forward to connect midfield and attack – also opening the scoring with a great volley from an Antonio Cassano corner, and providing the assist for Diego Milito to make it 2-0 to Inter.

Midfield?

Yet Inter didn’t necessarily have charge of the midfield – and in matches like this, between two sides that are better at playing on the counter-attack (Inter have generally performed better on the road than at San Siro this season), you sometimes wonder what the purpose of the midfield is.

This certainly wasn’t a match decided by dominance of possession (Napoli had 63%) and both sides are much more threatening when running with the ball directly, for neither side has any great creativity in the centre of the pitch. Hamsik and Guarin are ‘drivers’ rather than creators.

Cassano and Insigne

Therefore, the key men were the two withdrawn forwards, those that dropped away from the opposition defence into pockets of space. Cassano was on form here, dropping away from Gamberini – who still doesn’t look suited to a right-sided centre-back role, and was withdrawn at half-time (although a facial injury may have contributed to his departure). Cassano always drifts left, although he might have been even more effective working against Manuel Britos, who remains the weakest of Napoli’s back three.

At the other end, Lorenzo Insigne was doing pretty much the same thing – drifting wide and then taking on Andrea Rannochia. He cut inside onto his right foot, and was very prominent in the first 20 minutes or so, although Rannochia actually looked more comfortable as the game wore on, as if he’d worked out what Insigne was attempting to do. Meanwhile, Cavani didn’t stay in central positions without the ball, instead moving to the right to occupy Juan Jesus. It’s debatable whether this was the right approach, because it gave Cambiasso time on the ball.

Second half

Second half line-ups

For the second half, Mazzarri made an attack-minded change, bringing on Goran Pandev for Gamberini, and moving to a very fluid system featuring a back four. Maggio and Juan Zuniga became the full-backs, Inler and Behrami sat ahead of the defence, while high up the pitch Hamsik played to the right, Insigne on the left, and Pandev played close to Cavani, almost in a 4-4-2.

Napoli aren’t accustomed to playing with a back four, and their full-backs continued to play like wing-backs, trying to overload Inter down the flanks. There was now a difference in formations, and an obvious tactical question that would decide the second half – would Napoli take advantage of the two-versus-one situations on the wings, or would Inter exploit the space behind the full-backs on the break?

It could have been settled as early as the 50th minute – Cassano drifted in behind Maggio, got time to run with the ball, and although Maggio got back into position, he allowed Cassano space to fire a shot against the post.

Napoli score, Inter adapt

Meanwhile, Napoli were pushing forward and putting severe pressure upon the Inter backline, getting a goal back from a set-piece, and Stramaccioni changed his shape. Guarin was no longer needed in the centre of the pitch, where Napoli were using only two midfielders, so he was switched to a right-sided position, asked to look after Zuniga. Napoli continued to dominate the ball, but they weren’t overloading Inter on the flanks particularly well. Guarin and Rannochia were defending nicely against Insigne and Zuniga, while Alvaro Pereira was more in danger of being overwhelmed by Maggio and Hamsik – but Hamsik generally moved inside. Napoli had numbers in that zone and attempted plenty of shots from range.

Stramaccioni also used his substitutes better in the second half. Why did Mazzarri take off Inler, bringing on Blerim Dzemaili? That didn’t seem to add anything to Napoli’s game. Meanwhile, Stramaccioni removed both Cassano and Milito, who had tired from their constant running into the channels. Rodrigo Palacio and Coutinho had mobility and pace, with Coutinho playing to the left, in a slightly more advanced version of the role Guarin played.

Napoli put pressure upon Inter, but overall it was a fine defensive effort from the home side in the second half, tactically and in terms of individual displays.

Conclusion

Stramaccioni was particularly pleased with the performance of Guarin. “I asked him to act as trequartista in the first half, then needed him to sacrifice himself marking Zuniga,” he said. “I am happy with his performance.” He also explained why he didn’t play Palacio from the start, as he had against Juventus, for example. “I didn’t use a trident attack because Gokhan Inler, Valon Behrami and Hamsik have too much quality and it would’ve been too big a risk to our own stability.”

“Napoli had more possession, but Inter were clinical and took their chances. I am happy with the way the team played, but disappointed at the result,” offered Mazzarri.

This was basically two separate tactical battles – in the first half the formations were similar and Cassano and Insigne were the key men, but Guarin provided the most important contributions. In the second half, Napoli pushed men forward but Inter reacted intelligently.

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14 Responses to “ Inter 2-1 Napoli: Cassano & Insigne the key men but Guarin provides the most important contributions ”

RAHUL KHOND on December 12, 2012 at 3:58 pm

i think there is a growing fascination in italy to play a man to man offense compared to the zonal defense they had been playing all these years .

you are right that napoli were the better team they had better cohesion and they were threading inter’s defense at will but were not clinical .

at times i dont like the way cassano play’s because he is getting too predictable and good opposition coaches and use his move to trap him and then the entire inter’s offense may fall apart . guarin is the one who is making all the difference in this inter team and i was surprised that walter marazzi wasnt taking him seriously . although behrami is a decent player but he hasnt got that intelligence as to when to close down and when to just stand in front of the player and deter him and guarin is quite good in one on one situations ( i had recommended him when avb was at chelsea and when they were chasing hulk ) . to be honest if opposition can just subdue guarin then i dont think that inter have any offense where on they can harm opposition . if you want an example best would be the match against juventus as to how inter struggled till he came on . right of now inter’s just know to get the ball to guarin and let him do the thing . but if the opposition just studies them properly i think inter may struggle for the second half of the second half of the season

although you mentioned of the tactical battle of 3vs 3 in the middle of the pitch i think that the game just few by him and i think he was more concerned about zuniga getting passed
nagatomo who actually did quite well and was looking in that zone so that he could not come inside . gargano tried to get tight to inler but napoli’s fluidity allowed him get the space and wriggle away from gargano . both were there to stop napoli play through the middle but were mere spectators to the movement of napoli .

for i think they were quite fluid in their passing and mazzari has worked quite well with them but there offense lacked a certain edge neither of the napoli’s midfielder’s didnt tried to get beyond cavani who had an excellent game . in the 3-5-2 system your wingbacks are the one who can cause considerable havoc but napoli’s wingbacks were quite subdued even i can say i had never seen maggio being so dominated by somebody he was just outpaced by pereira of the second goal .

most of all luck was on inter’s side .

last but not the lease i just read your article on books to be read and there was one book something called chess and football . now definitely chess and football has connection infact any team game has connection with chess but my point was you should take in consideration the word prophylaxis in retrospect to football and the think of Tigran(the tiger )Petrosian .

RAHUL KHOND on December 12, 2012 at 4:00 pm

do the liverpool -west ham game it was very good .

Anonymous Coward on December 16, 2012 at 10:01 am

?

I am a Liverpool fan and admit it was a shit game.West Ham are no better than Stoke and Liverpool were rubbish.

ins on December 12, 2012 at 4:53 pm

Another Seria A match. I guess there is an increasing interest about Seria A, especially from the previous season, since when the Calcio is moving forward. There is a lot of talent and really interesting tactical battles.

I also agree that Guarin made the difference here. He was hardworking and linking up really well. At the other side Hamsik could do the same, however he was “lazy” and later on I think substituted for an injury (maby he played with an injury the whole game).

Someone mentioned in the article about the match between Schachtar and Juventus that Juve will struggle against teams that can bring the ball quick from wide to mid positions. I think this is exactly what happend in this game. Cassano and Guarin linked really well, while Hamsik and Insigne did not. On top of that Strama reacted really well to the game changes in the second half, while Napoli’s coach did something I could not understand at all.

BlackadderFan on December 12, 2012 at 6:49 pm

Great article. I’ve learnt a lot about the tactics used in Serie A thanks to your website, Michael. Thank you.

fewfe on December 12, 2012 at 8:53 pm

“you sometimes wonder what the purpose of the midfield is.” haha spot on

kabcity on December 13, 2012 at 3:51 am

Excellent review as usual. Serie A is very enjoyable to watch these days.

Cambiasso is a foot (legend(leg end)),his positioning is so good he can excel at CB as well.I will always remember with nostalgia him containing what seemed like the entire Barca midfield plus Messi with relative ease.

Mo on December 14, 2012 at 9:26 pm

Great review!

What about Chelsea’s game against Monterrey?

The use of David Luiz in the Midfield. Any thoughts?

BlackadderFan on December 15, 2012 at 8:13 am

This weekend (December 14-17) there are some fantastic games for zonal marking to cover, such as Barca v Atletico and PSG v Lyon

Sir Bow on December 16, 2012 at 9:26 am

Great article bro. Just when i thought inter gotten better, they lost again this saturday ~_~. I wonderin whats wrong with inter, they just wasting too much point.